Simple Irish Brown Bread
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Made with whole wheat flour, wheat germ, and rolled oats, this simple Irish brown bread comes together in no time and yields a hearty, super-tasty loaf, perfect for toasting and slathering with good Irish butter. Break out the Kerrygold!

This traditional Irish brown recipe includes rolled oats and comes from Reader Michael in Ireland. Unlike Irish soda bread, which is made from a thick dough that can be formed before going in the oven, Irish brown bread is made with a very wet dough and requires a loaf pan or other mold. Typically, it’s made with a good amount of whole wheat flour and wheat germ.
I love this bread for many reasons, but especially for its speed and simplicity: the batter can be mixed together before the oven preheats; it smells like a savory pancake as it bakes; and it yields a super flavorful, hearty loaf perfect for slicing, toasting, and slathering with good Irish butter.
My children love this bread with their eggs for breakfast, and when it’s freshly baked, they love packing buttered slices in their lunch boxes. If you love soda bread, you will love this delicious take on the Irish quick bread. Find step-by-step instructions below.
Irish Brown Bread, Step by Step
Gather your ingredients: As noted above, I’m using a mix of Cairnspring Mills flour, but you can use any stone-milled or whole-wheat flour you like.

Measure them out, if you wish. For best results, use a scale to measure.

Combine the dry ingredients in a bowl:

And whisk them together:

Whisk together the wet ingredients:

Then add them to the dry:

Stir until you have a very sticky dough/batter:

Transfer it to a buttered 8.5×4.4-inch loaf pan:

Sprinkle with oats:

Then transfer to the oven:

Bake for 45 to 50 minutes:


Let cool for at least 30 minutes before slicing:


While I wouldn’t use this bread for sandwiches, I couldn’t recommend it more for toast:

Break out the Kerrygold!

Enjoy.

Simple Irish Brown Bread
- Total Time: 1 hour
- Yield: 1 loaf 1x
- Diet: Vegetarian
Description
Made with whole wheat flour, wheat germ, and rolled oats, this simple Irish brown bread comes together in no time and yields a hearty, super-tasty loaf, perfect for toasting and slathering with good Irish butter. Break out the Kerrygold!
Recipe adapted from reader Michael — thank you!
Notes:
For best results, use a scale to measure.
Flour: I’m using 100% Cairnspring Mills stone-milled flour here. For the bread flour portion of the recipe, I used their Glacier Peak Bread Flour, and for the whole wheat flour, I used their Sequoia All-Purpose Flour. Just know that you can really use any mix of whole wheat and all-purpose or bread flour here — it’s a dense, hearty bread so many flours will work. You need 2.75 cups flour total.
Salt: If you are using Morton Kosher Salt or fine sea salt, use half as much by volume or the same amount by weight.
Ingredients
- 180 grams (about 1.5 cups) bread flour, see notes above
- 165 grams (about 1.25 cups) whole wheat flour, see notes above
- 50 grams (about 1/2 cup) rolled oats, plus more for sprinkling
- 44 grams (about 1/2 cup) wheat germ
- 10 grams (about 2 teaspoons) brown sugar
- 10 grams (about 2 teaspoons) Diamond Crystal Kosher Salt, see notes above
- 5 grams (about 1 teaspoon) baking soda
- 1 egg
- 450 grams (about 1.75 cups) buttermilk
- 28 grams (2 tablespoons) melted butter
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 400ºF. Butter an 8.5×4.5 inch loaf pan.
- In a large bowl, whisk together the dry ingredients.
- In a medium bowl, whisk together the buttermilk, egg, and melted butter.
- Add the wet ingredients to the dry ingredients and use a spatula to mix until you have a wet, sticky batter. Transfer the batter to the prepared loaf pan. Using a wet hand, spread the batter out evenly in the pan. Sprinkle oats over the top to cover.
- Transfer to the oven for 45 to 55 minutes or until a toothpick inserted comes out cleanly. If you have an instant-read thermometer, it should register roughly 205ºF when it’s done. Do be sure to test the loaf before removing it from the oven — once I removed it without testing, and upon cutting it, I found a pocket of un-cooked dough in the center. Err on the side of over-baking — it’s forgiving!
- Prep Time: 10 minutes
- Cook Time: 50 minutes
- Category: Bread
- Method: Oven
- Cuisine: American, Irish
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114 Comments on “Simple Irish Brown Bread”
Made this for probably the 40th time this morning. A taste of Ireland!!! I use stone ground heritage weep sold at my local farmers market. It puts it over the top. Thank you, Alexandra!
So nice to read this, Elizabeth! Thanks so much for writing and sharing this 🙂
i just put a loaf into the oven–after i remove it from the oven, should I leave it in the pan for a while? if so, how long? doubt you will get this in time, but…..will give it 5 but really can’t tell yet.
Hi! I’m obviously too late, but I remove the loaf from the pan as soon as I take it out of the oven. I don’t think you would ruin it, however, if you let it cool in the pan — it’s forgiving!